If not for a case of insurance fraud, a kickback scheme William Lerach, who was one of the nation's busiest class actions before being imprisoned earlier this year, might never have come to light,
Members of the automation committee of the American Association of Managing General Agents shared their views on the two automation barriers in September during the annual convention of the National
New York--The chairman of Travelers said his company prepared a four-pronged solution to solve coastal insurance problems, and federal lawmakers can dust it off and grab onto it when the inevitable cri
NEW YORK--Reinsurers are entering a hard market, a reinsurance company executive predicted yesterday, admonishing industry peers to get it right this time and to work to sustain whatever level of profi
NEW YORK--Reinsurance market optimists may need to pen up their bullish forecasts a little longer, a representative of global reinsurance brokerage firm suggested at an industry conference here yesterd
The eerie silence that has set in over the directors and officers liability insurance marketplace could be an indication of a looming hard market that will strike on Jan. 1, 2009, one leading broker
The worst third-quarter of financial results since 2005 didn't dampen the spirits of Bermuda insurance executives keenly focused on opportunities emerging in the wake of a worldwide financial crisis.
If not for a case of art insurance fraud, a kickback scheme involving attorney William Lerach, who masterminded massive class-action cases, might never have come to light, according to a former assist
SAN FRANCISCO--Attorney William Lerach, the onetime mastermind behind countless fraud-tainted securities class actions, said in an interview before going to prison that the illegal methods he used were